“Kith and Kin: Poems of Animal Life.” Edited by Henry S. Salt. London, 1901.
“Every Living Creature.” By Ralph Waldo Trine. London, 1901.
“The Basis of Morality.” By Arthur Schopenhauer. Translated by A. B. Bullock. London, 1903.
“The Universal Kinship.” By J. Howard Moore. London, 1906. This brilliantly written work asserts the scientific basis of humanitarianism, and treats of the subject of animals’ rights under three heads—the physical, the psychical, and the ethical kinship between human and sub-human.
“The New Ethics.” By J. Howard Moore. London, 1907.
“The Church and Kindness to Animals.” London, 1907. A translation from the French, “L’Église et la Pitié envers les Animaux” (1903), in vindication of the Catholic Church against the charge of indifference to animal suffering.
“The Place of Animals in Human Thought.” By the Countess Martinengo Cesaresco. London, 1909. A work of value to those who are studying the psychological aspect of the question.
“The Mahatma and the Hare.” By H. Rider Haggard. London, 1911.
“Killing for Sport.” By various writers, edited by Henry S. Salt, with Introduction by G. Bernard Shaw. London, 1915.
The Publications of the Humanitarian League—Pamphlets on various subjects, 1891-1919.